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-   -   2020 New Random Pics (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/showthread.php?t=1065287)

Racerbvd 07-11-2022 03:50 PM

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Racerbvd 07-11-2022 06:51 PM

This is for Glenn and Paul. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1657594253.jpg

GH85Carrera 07-12-2022 07:18 AM

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GH85Carrera 07-12-2022 11:26 AM

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Northumbrian Miner at His Evening Meal. 1937, by Bill Brandt

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The "ferocious man-eating tiger" which terrifies Ringo Starr in "Help!" (1965) in the cellar of the pub is actually only a cub; it appears to be about ten months old. A real full-grown tiger would be much larger. In addition to this, Ringo was also behind several inches of glass, separating between him and the tiger.
In the pub scene, the other three Beatles are persuading Ringo to have his ring finger amputated. Ringo refuses, insisting that he will miss the digit. Paul McCartney counters with, "Well, you didn't miss your tonsils, did you?" Ringo actually underwent a tonsillectomy two months prior to filming.
By Paul McCartney's and Ringo's own admission, they were so stoned on pot the day they shot the scene where Dr. Foot (Victor Spinetti) and Algernon (Roy Kinnear) tried to blow them up in the Austrian Alps that when George Harrison screamed his line "It's an fiendish thingy! Run Ringo!" both Ringo and Paul ran over the next hill.
Originally, the Beatles were going to make a western picture. The story was going to be set in Texas and involved the four of them fighting over the affections of a cattle baron's daughter. There are even publicity photos showing them on horseback and wearing cowboy outfits. However the film shut down production and the Beatles ended up making this film instead. According to McCartney, the script was designed around their requests that the story involves them going to places like the Austrian Alps and the Bahamas because they had never been there before.

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59 years ago!
Dwight D. Eisenhower speaking near the Gettysburg High School during the 1963 battle of Gettysburg centennial celebrations. Original photo from The Gettysburg Museum Of History archives.

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GH85Carrera 07-12-2022 12:04 PM

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Hawaiian Crown Princess Kaʻiulani in San Francisco, 1897
Victoria Kaʻiulani Kalaninuiahilapalapa Kawekiu i Lunalilo Cleghorn (1875–1899) was heir to the throne of the Kingdom of Hawaii and held the title of Crown Princess. Kaʻiulani became known throughout the world for her intelligence, beauty and determination. After the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy in 1893, she visited the United States to help restore the Kingdom. Although reluctant to participate in politics, she made many speeches and public appearances denouncing the overthrow of her government and the injustice toward her people. In Washington, D.C, she paid an informal visit to U.S. President Grover Cleveland and his wife, but her efforts could not prevent eventual annexation.In 1898, while on a horse ride in the mountains of Hawaii Island, Kaʻiulani was caught in a storm and came down with a fever and pneumonia. Earlier she had caught cold from swimming while on the Big Island, and this worsened matters. Kaʻiulani was brought back to Oahu where her health continued to decline. She died on March 6, 1899 at the age of 23 of inflammatory rheumatism. She was interred in Honolulu's Royal Mausoleum of Hawaii. Her father also said that he thought that since Hawaii was gone, it was fitting for Kaʻiulani to go as well.

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On July 6, 1923, a moonshine still exploded across the street from the Goldfield Hotel. The fire blazed for 13 hours, taking out many of the town’s businesses and homes. The town never fully recovered.

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svandamme 07-12-2022 09:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 11740380)

Belgian Draft horses, thoroubread english, American Quarter, Appaloosa, nooooo problem


But ya gotta watch out for the American Mustang.

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Especially if the ears go flat and the back end comes loose.

Adrian Thompson 07-13-2022 04:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 11741358)

Damn gas is cheap these days.
If we assume that pic is 1970, that's 8.17/gal today
If we assume that pic is 1971, that's 7.83/gal today
If we assume that pic is 1971, that's 7.58/gal today
If we assume that pic is 1971, that's 7.17/gal today

masraum 07-13-2022 05:12 AM

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Quote:

1938 Grossglockner High Alpines : Hermann Lang, Mercedes-Benz W154 3.0 v12, Daimler-Benz

The meetings followed in 1938 and 1939 indeed brought the large work race stables to the Grossglockner Road, but the atmosphere were strongly impaired by bad weather conditions. Also the numbers of entries remained in a modest scale. Hill climb race champion Hans Stuck on Auto Union, Hermann Lang on Mercedes and Manfred von Brauchitsch participated with their automobiles, Ewald Kluge on DKW, Leonhard Fassl on NSU lined up at the start beside many other participants of the first race from 1935.

The Austrians were steely-eyed during the Glockner race in 1938 as a blue automobile, a perfectly ordinary touring car never seen there before, hummed happily up the Grossglockner race course. The loudspeakers made it known that this vehicle required 21:54.4 minutes for the 12.5 km course and achieved an average of 34.5 km per hour. Utterly without boiling over or adding cooling water. There was a famous man at the wheel: Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, and the automobile – the “KdF car”, Germany's Volkswagen!

Prof. Ferdinand Porsche, who ran a construction office in Stuttgart, constructed this Volkswagen on commission to the German government of the day. Prof. Porsche was then forced during the Second World War to move his factory to Gmünd in Carinthia. The first Porsche models were made there after the war. When the factory again returned to Stuttgart, he also founded the oldest Porsche workshop in Austria, the Porsche in the Alpenstraße in Salzburg. Prof. Porsche also constructed the Auto Union type C racing car, which with about 520 horse power dominated the races in the mid-1930s. This racing car was also used in the three Glockner races.

Grossglockner on August 26, 1938. The field of participants was not very large – motor-sport was simply very expensive! Sepp Hofmann from Salzburg on a private BMW 500 R 51 SS provided one of the two sensations among motorcycle-racing participants in the second Grossglockner race.

The first was that Ewald Kluge (Germany) rode in the worst possible weather the best motorcycle time of 68,46 km per hour and thus became the “German Hill Climb Champion”. And that with only a 250cc DKW racing motorcycle! It should be mentioned that the “German Hill Climb Champion” title was given to the rider achieving the best overall time, independent of the racing class. Kluge rode up the mountain in an overall time (two heats) of 22:05.2 minutes. The second sensation was that the private rider, Sepp Hofmann, with an overall time of 24:38.2 minutes, won in the half-litre class ahead of the DKW works rider, Bungerz.

The course length in 1938 was 12.5 km; one drove twice from the Ferleitentoll gate to the Fuscher Törl. As the winner of the 350cc class, brand colleague Sissi Wünsche (Germany), achieved a time of only 23:12.1 minutes. This was because bad weather hindered fast riding during the event. The newly minted European dirt-track champion, Martin Schneeweiss from Vienna, Austria, disappointed the spectators. He had been taken into the BMW works team that year, but could not get along with the supercharged boxer. He already had “dismounted” in the Grand Prix of Germany in Hohenstein, which also happened to him on the Grossglockner.

Hans Stuck became the “German Hill Climb Champion” in an Auto Union with an overall time of 20:10 minutes (74.67 km per hour) ahead of Hermann Lang and Manfred von Brauchitsch (both in Mercedes Benz). (ph: Daimler, Report: Wikipedia)
^That's^ the text that was included with the photo on faceplant. One of the things that I find amazing is that this is a cobblestone street.

masraum 07-13-2022 05:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Adrian Thompson (Post 11741789)
Damn gas is cheap these days.
If we assume that pic is 1970, that's 8.17/gal today
If we assume that pic is 1971, that's 7.83/gal today
If we assume that pic is 1971, that's 7.58/gal today
If we assume that pic is 1971, that's 7.17/gal today

I assume that was supposed to be 1971-1973.

Yes, everyone complains when prices go up, but we actually have crazy cheap gas these days in the US, even at it's current prices.

GH85Carrera 07-13-2022 09:12 AM

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The Appian Way, built in 312 BCE. This famous Roman road is still in use today!

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The Greatest Thing Since Sliced Bread!

Today in History -- On today’s date 94 years ago, Saturday, July 7, 1928, something happened that has been said to be “the greatest thing that ever happened” when machine-sliced bread was sold for the first time by the Chillicothe Baking Company of Chillicothe, Missouri.
Also on today’s date, but 142 years ago on Wednesday, July 7, 1880, noted American inventor & engineer Otto Frederick Rohwedder (1880-1960), “The Father of Sliced Bread” was born in Des Moines, Iowa.
According to Wikipedia: Otto Frederick Rohwedder of Davenport, Iowa invented the first loaf-at-a-time bread-slicing machine. A prototype he built in 1912 was destroyed in a fire & it was not until 1928 that Rohwedder had a fully working machine ready. The first commercial use of the machine was by the Chillicothe Baking Company of Chillicothe, Missouri, which produced their first slices on July 7, 1928. Their product, “Kleen Maid Sliced Bread,” proved to be a great success. Battle Creek, Michigan has a competing claim as the first city to sell bread pre-sliced by Rohwedder’s machine; however, historians have produced no documentation backing up Battle Creek’s claim. The bread was advertised as “the greatest forward step in the baking industry since bread was wrapped.” This eventually led to the popular catch-phrase, “It’s the greatest thing since sliced bread.”
The popularity of the above-mentioned catch-phrase is believed to derive from it’s use in 1952 by the famous American comedian Red Skelton (1913-1997), when he stated in an interview with the “Daily Times” newspaper of Salisbury, Maryland, “Don’t worry about television. It’s the greatest thing since sliced bread.”
Rohwedder’s original bread-slicing machine is now in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
The undated left-hand photograph depicts the bespectacled visage of Otto Rohwedder, “The Father of Sliced Bread,” who was born in Des Moines, Iowa on today’s date 141 years ago, July 7, 1880. The right-hand photograph depicts an advertisement for sliced bread that appeared on page eight of the Friday, July 6, 1928 edition of the Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune announcing the introduction of sliced bread on Saturday, July 7, 1928.

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GH85Carrera 07-13-2022 09:15 AM

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This 3.300-year-old chariot bridge in Greece is still in use today
The Arkadiko Bridge in Greece was built between 1300 and 1190 BCE, making it one of the oldest still-used arch bridges still in existence. Built on a road that linked Tiryns to Epidaurus, it was part of a larger military road system.

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Walter's Wiggles is a series of 21 steep switchbacks on the hike to Angels Landing in Zion National Park, Utah, USA

dafischer 07-13-2022 11:50 AM

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GH85Carrera 07-13-2022 12:07 PM

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The world's last commercial ocean-going sailing ship - Pamir - rounding Cape Horn, 1949.
_
Pamir was a four-masted barque (a type of sailing vessel with three or more masts), built for the German shipping company F. Laeisz in Hamburg in 1905. She was the last commercial sailing ship to round Cape Horn, in 1949.
She was handed over to Italy in 1920 as part of war reparations (WWI).
In 1924, the F. Laeisz Company bought her back and put her into service in the nitrate trade again. Laeisz sold her in 1931 to the Finnish shipping company of Gustaf Erikson, which used her in the Australian wheat trade.
During WW2, New Zealand captured it from the Finnish corporation, as war loot basically, and didn't return it until 1948.
The last owner was a German company that used it as a school ship and modernized it (Adding a motor and modern necessities. Though the propeller fell off during a voyage). Eventually even this failed to make the ship profitable and the company couldn't afford to take care of the ship.
On 21 September 1957, she was caught in Hurricane Carrie and sank off the Azores.
A nine-day search for survivors was organized by the United States Coast Guard Cutter Absecon, but only four crewmen and two cadets were rescued alive, from two of the lifeboats. It was reported that many of the 86 men aboard had managed to reach the boats, but most died in the next three days.
The sinking made headlines around the world; it was a national tragedy in Germany.

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The original design of Mount Rushmore before funding ran out in 1941

Racerbvd 07-13-2022 01:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Adrian Thompson (Post 11741789)
Damn gas is cheap these days.
If we assume that pic is 1970, that's 8.17/gal today
If we assume that pic is 1971, that's 7.83/gal today
If we assume that pic is 1971, that's 7.58/gal today
If we assume that pic is 1971, that's 7.17/gal today

That is definitely later than 1971, I remember thinking that if gas prices ever got over a$1.00 wondering how I was going to be able to afford to go to the beach to go surfing and Surfing and BMX road trips.
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GH85Carrera 07-13-2022 01:19 PM

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Washington, D.C., in 1919. Street lunch vendor.
An early food truck.

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The situation was critical for this soldiers using this road. They had just been ambushed a few moments earlier but the German machine gunner was shot. His body is lying behind the machine gun ammunition cases. One of the Americans has most likely been hit as there is an American helmet lying on the ground near the hedge on the left. Two GIs are ready to open fire with their M1 Garand Rifle.

“We didn’t feel safe in the hedges; we were like rabbits waiting for the hunters. The arrival of the replacements had reassured us, of course, but there was still something there that stopped us from feeling comfortable. Red Ferris (one of the platoon leaders from ‘A’ Company, 175th) had just send two of his men to reccy the ground ahead. Those damned hedges were really deadly and we never knew what was waiting for us on the other side. Everything was quiet. Almost too quiet. Even the birds were silent. We had tried various methods of advancing through the network of hedges; two guys up front, as we did now, or a platoon running from one hedge to the next, with another platoon hidden in the undergrowth behind to provide covering fire and so on and so on.”
Lieutenant John S, Allsup, 175th Infantry Regiment.
Source: Objective Saint-Lo by Georges Barnage


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The Circular Bridge on the Mount Lowe Railway, north of Los Angeles, c. 1910. (Metro Library and Archive)

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UconnTim97 07-13-2022 02:23 PM

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Steve Carlton 07-13-2022 03:04 PM

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masraum 07-13-2022 04:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 11742340)

It's interesting to me. When I see monsterous jagged rocky mountains, my gut thinks "those are giant, ancient mountains," and when I see soft edged, smaller mountains with more vegetation, I think "those seem young."

But it's actually opposite. The older softer edged mountains are softer edged and covered in more vegetation because they've been worn down by the elements over the millenia. But the younger mountains don't have the benefit of as many millions of years of erosion to have worn the edges off and rounded things. And all of that erosion, and all of those years causes a build up of earth where vegetation can take hold.

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flatbutt 07-13-2022 05:03 PM

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Por_sha911 07-13-2022 05:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by masraum (Post 11742520)
It's interesting to me. When I see monsterous jagged rocky mountains, my gut thinks "those are giant, ancient mountains," and when I see soft edged, smaller mountains with more vegetation, I think "those seem young."
But it's actually opposite. The older softer edged mountains are softer edged and covered in more vegetation because they've been worn down by the elements over the millenia. But the younger mountains don't have the benefit of as many millions of years of erosion to have worn the edges off and rounded things.

Followed by
Quote:

Originally Posted by flatbutt (Post 11742524)

Flat-are you guessing the age of mountains?

Random
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